0 relating to money that can be got back after it has been paid, spent, taken by someone, etc.: --
1 used to describe the amount of oil, coal, etc. that can be taken from a particular place: --
However, the data may be recoverable depending upon the file format used.
Effectiveness is generally determined by the extent to which a speaker's message is recoverable by his or her intended audience.
In accordance with suppressed eosinophil numbers, the number of migrating worms was recoverable (table 2).
It would of course also have repercussions for the form of the curve describing the decline in numbers recoverable from the lungs.
The pattern of numbers of schistosomula recoverable from the lungs was predicted and compared with experimentally observed values by linear regression.
Shading denotes that the information is not recoverable from the text.
Although stable magnetizations are usually recoverable, their origins are complex.
Any costs incurred in medical treatment abroad are then recoverable from their country of origin.